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[ US /ˈəʃɝ/ ]
[ UK /ˈʌʃɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone employed to conduct others
  2. an official stationed at the entrance of a courtroom or legislative chamber
VERB
  1. take (someone) to their seats, as in theaters or auditoriums
    The usher showed us to our seats

How To Use usher In A Sentence

  • Kids sneaking into and R-rated film and having to be kicked out after a few minutes by n usher is one thing, but when the parents are taking them is another. R-Rated Movies: How Young Is Too Young? « FirstShowing.net
  • Officers ushered her into a side room with him. The Sun
  • NHS penpusher boom: Wages bill is up £78m as 'costly' drugs are vetoed Home | Mail Online
  • Innovations in touchless technology have made it possible to install an automatic flusher without ripping out existing fixtures.
  • But it actually is ushering in a new rationale for the media's scandal mongering.
  • The guard ushered me into the office of a burly fiftysomething man in a police uniform. Times, Sunday Times
  • The year was ushered in by starlit skies, a bright silvery moon and biting cold.
  • If this was the UK, I would expect to be ushered to a table (probably grumbling inwardly about the empty tables I passed on the way), then, once seated, make a curt nod and "hullo" to my table mates before either engaging in quiet conversation with my companion or looking pensively out of the window, trying hard to look like I'm thinking of Very Important Things. Amtrak adventures
  • When you go to a conference you can sit in a room all morning and feel like you've heard all the speeches before," says Ian Usher, e-learning co-ordinator with Buckinghamshire county council and a TeachMeet organiser. Bett 2011 | In search of leadership
  • A welcome sign of the times to encourage young men to reach for the blushers and exfoliants?
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